.

Sunday, 28 September 2014

To put together the walks and
cycles in ‘Discover where you live’ in the Community Index over the last few
months I have used maps, both paper and online.

Ordnance Survey produces the best
maps in the world. Fact! For the rural explorer in particular the 1:25,000
really are the best with 4cm to 1 kilometre. To explore Chorlton, the Transpennine
Trail to Stockport, Fallowfield Loop and much more get ‘OS Explorer 277
Manchester & Salford’. However when researching the walks for Community Index I also used
Open Source mapping ‘Open Street Map’ which for the densely packed urban and
suburban environments can be (though I hate to say it) more useful than the OS map.
It is available on desktop, see https://www.openstreetmap.org and on the iPhone / iPad, download the app Go
Map!! And of course the wonderful Google Maps, Street view and Google Earth are
fantastic free digital mapping tools as well as the OS Get a Map Digital
Services.

People may think that using a map and
compass and navigating in general is only for when you are in remote locations.
However maps can really help you get to know your local area much more
intimately.

Many of us stick to the same familiar routes whether
driving, walking or cycling, and feel we know Chorlton, the Meadows, and the
area around us well enough. Maps, even of a place as familiar to us as Chorlton
Meadows can reveal nooks, crannies, short cuts and paths which can easily be missed
if you aren’t looking for them. When researching the event ‘Map reading on the
Meadows’ I ran as part of Chorlton Arts Festival earlier this year I
‘discovered’ a pond I hadn’t known was there, and I have lived, walked, run and
cycled on the Meadows for many years.

Just from looking at the map square containing Chorlton Ees
I know it is flat rough grassland and deciduous woodland dotted by five ponds.
You can cycle through this nature reserve on a route which is part of the
National Cycle Network. It includes part of a long distance walking route and has
a stream with steep sides. There are lots of tracks criss-crossing the Ees but
very few rights of way except for on the river bank.

Maps embody so much information about the world around us.
From maps you can understand the history of a landscape, its current uses,
facilities and features. Engaging with a map, reading its symbols and
interpreting the information crammed into every kilometre square gives us a
greater appreciation of the world around us and it can pique a curiosity to find out more.

So what does the map tell us about Chorlton Ees? I have
already said there are few rights of way. Rights of way are green lines on the
map and are key to any walker. They tell you where you can walk. Rights of way
are enshrined in law and in many cases reflect historic and sometimes ancient
routes. Short green dashed lines are footpaths, boots only; long green dashed
lines are bridleways for boots, hooves and wheels.

On the Meadows instead of footpaths there are tracks (black
dashed lines) which indicate there is a track on the ground but not necessarily
a legal right of way for the public. There are also routes suitable for
cyclists marked by a string of orange circles, this tells me this is not a
historic route, otherwise it would be a bridleway.

The lack of footpaths and bridleways tells me that this land
hasn’t historically been accessed by people on foot, by cart or more recently
by bike. Why would this be? David Bishop of Friends of Chorlton Meadows (http://friendsofchorltonmeadows.blogspot.co.uk/)
gives us a very big clue, ‘From the late 19th century until the late 1970s
agriculture was gradually displaced from the Mersey Valley and what was
deposited on the ees was not “rich mud” but the growing city’s effluent in the
form of sewage works and rubbish dumps.’ Who would need or want to walk through
that?! Knowing this it makes much more sense why there is a dearth of historic
routes across the Ees.

Using a map and compass gives you the tools to be your own
(urban) adventurer and explorer, to know where you are and get you where you
want to be. It is like learning a new
language, allowing you to create your own routes and giving you the key to a new way of understanding and
interacting with your environment, local or not. I find it fun to walk paths
some created recently, many created by centuries of use and it is empowering to
get around under your own steam, using your own two legs and some basic map and
compass skills to get from A to B whether you are in town or country.

Friday, 1 August 2014

When
I first moved to South Manchester, in the early 1970s, I soon discovered the
Mersey Valley – particularly the Chorlton Ees and Ivy Green areas on either
side of Chorlton Brook, and Hardy Farm (collectively referred to locally as
‘Chorlton Meadows’). At that time I was developing an interest in botany and
was amazed at the richness of this area’s flora. It soon became a favourite
Sunday afternoon occupation of mine to take a field guide down to the Meadows
and try to identify as many plants as possible. I soon realised that many of
the plants that I was finding were of the ‘semi-natural grassland’ type, and I
was aware, even then, that semi-natural grasslands are the richest habitats
for wildlife in England, supporting more priority species than any other; a
fifth of all priority species are associated with grasslands. I was also aware
that grasslands are now among our most endangered habitats – mainly due, in the
wider countryside, to agricultural intensification.

Since 1940 we have lost 97% of our English meadows and pastures and
there are only 8000 ha left 1.

There were once extensive ‘water meadows’ in the Mersey Valley. Local
Farmers deliberately flooded these meadows in the winter months in order to
deposit a layer of rich silt which, in turn, produced abundant grasses which
were cut for hay in late summer. Such a system would have a required an
elaborate and sophisticated system of sluices and drains in order to get the
water first on to and then off of the meadows. This system has been almost entirely
lost. The local name for a water meadow was ‘ees’. Chorlton’s historian, John
Lloyd, wrote that:

“Those who tilled the fields in those past ages were well aware of the
need to control the flood waters in the ees and of the benefit of the layer of
rich silt left by the receding water. Within the memory of people still alive
[in the late 1960s?] the farmer who last tenanted Barlow Hall Farm commented
that the sluice gates in the banks were never opened for the first flood of the
year for this brought down the rubbish, but the second flood brought down the
rich mud 2.”

A more recent local historian, Andrew Simpson, has added more detail on
the operation of water meadows:

“[Meadows consist of] grassland that is kept damp by the use of ditches
(called carriers) that are worked by sluice gates fed by a river. The land is
fed with water up to an inch in depth from October to January for about fifteen
to twenty days at a time, before water is run off into the drainage ditches.
The land is then left to dry out for five or six days, so the air can get to
the grass. The early watering took advantage of the autumnal floods, which
brought with them a mix of nutrients and silt which enriched the land 3.”

Andrew also tells us that this was a very skilled job, which the owner
of the land, the farmer, tended to undertake himself rather than delegate it to
some employee. It required constant vigilance to ensure that, “the water was
evenly distributed and that there was no accumulation of weeds.” The farmer
also had to beware of hard frosts which “could turn the meadow into ‘one sheet
of ice which will draw the grass into heaps which is very injurious to
meadows’”. Nevertheless, an early 20th century farmer, Alfred
Higginbotham, annually flooded one of his meadows so that the people of the
local community could skate on it (there are still local ancestral memories of
skating on the Meadows in the winter).

The next important task was haymaking during the summer. The grass was
first cut and then left for a few days to partly dry. It was then turned and
left for a few more days to complete the drying process. Finally, it was loaded
into carts, taken off to be stored in barns and then used, during the winter
months, to feed farm animals with. Haymaking was also a highly skilled job and
was very labour intensive.

In the course of the research for his book, Andrew came across a mid-19th
century haymaker named John Gresty. John lived in a cottage on The Row (now
Beech Road) and probably hired himself out to local farmers at the appropriate
time of year. John’s most precious possession was almost certainly the key tool
of his trade – his scythe. This consisted of an artfully crooked pole, about 5
½ feet long, with two projecting side handles and a 3 foot long, curved steel
blade at the ‘business end’; one of John’s essential skills would have been
knowing how to use a whetstone to keep this blade razor sharp. He, and any
fellow haymakers, would have swept their scythes through the grass in long arcs,
keeping the blades parallel to and close to the ground. The blades were swept
from right to left depositing the cut grass on the left.

As a result of this annual management regime, probably acting over
several centuries, a distinctive type of meadow evolved (hence the term
‘semi-natural’). According to the National Vegetation Classification scheme 4
our meadows were of the ‘Alopecurus-Sanguisorba’ type (code MG4). This means
that they were distinguished by the presence of the grass Meadow Foxtail (Alopecurus pratensis) and the tall herb
Great Burnet (Sanguisorba officinalis).
The following ‘constant’ species were also present in such meadows (I have
indicated the grasses with a ‘g’) 5:

Common Mouse-ear (Cerastium
fontanum)

Crested Dog-tail (Cynosurus
cristatus) g

Red Fescue (Festuca rubra) g

Meadowsweet (Filipendula ulmaria)

Yorkshire Fog (Holcus lanatus)
g

Meadow Vetchling (Lathyrus
pratensis)

Autumn Hawkbit (Leontodon
autumnalis)

Perennial Rye-grass (Lolium
perenne) g

Meadow Buttercup (Ranunculus acris)

Common Sorrel (Rumex acetosa)

Dandelion (Taraxacum officinale
agg.)

Red Clover (Trifolium pratense)

White Clover (Trifolium repens)

It’s interesting to note that all of the species on this list are still locally
common. In individual meadows, other grasses and grassland species, not on the
core list, could often be found.

It’s important to note that MG4 grasslands are now quite rare and tend
to be confined to certain river valleys in central England.

From the late 19th century until the late 1970s agriculture
was gradually displaced from the Mersey Valley and what was deposited on the
ees was not “rich mud” but the growing city’s effluent in the form of sewage
works and rubbish dumps. Nevertheless,
when the Mersey Valley Countryside Warden Service was established in 1978 there
were still some reasonably good examples of semi-natural grassland left on both
the Chorlton and Sale sides of the river (although, alas, these were no longer
subjected to winter flooding). Sale Ees was particularly interesting because it
was still visibly a reasonably good example of an MG4 meadow. On Chorlton Ees
there is still a colony of Adderstongue Fern – a curious, and increasingly
scarce little plant generally considered to be an indicator species of
unimproved grassland (and probably corresponding to the colony recorded from
the area by the Manchester botanist, Richard Buxton in his Flora of 1849 6).

After 1978 the management and conservation of these meadows (together
with a few more, further west and east) should have been, in my opinion, an
absolute priority – but tree planting and the encouragement of ‘informal
recreation’ took precedence. At the very
least these areas needed to be cut in late summer and the hay crop taken off,
and indeed this happened for a few years. The hay crop was sold to local
livestock owners but eventually, for reasons which are obscure, this form of
management ceased. Soon the meadows began to deteriorate. Although some Great
Burnet still grows on Sale Ees the area is dominated by coarse grasses and is
succumbing to natural succession and trees and shrubs are taking over. Chorlton
Ees has begun to go the same way but it has been further damaged by a
pyromaniac who for a number of years has set fire to it every spring; now it is
dominated by Rosebay Willowherb – a plant which readily colonises burned
ground. These precious few acres of
historic, local semi-natural grassland are now very severely degraded and could
be lost in a few years. I must give credit, though, to the Environment Agency
who cleared rank vegetation from two key areas earlier this year.

In 2013 Natural England gave the
Greater Manchester Ecology Unit £8820 for a 2 year project to investigate the
decline of Mersey Valley grasslands. Now GMEU has a plan to restore many of these
grasslands. The plan has been written by GMEU ecologist, David Dutton 7.
David’s plan is meticulously detailed and fully costed and is presently the
subject of a Manchester Clean City grant application. Nevertheless, if this
application is unsuccessful other sources of funding will need to be sought and
additional funding could be necessary at some future date.

David’s discussions with Wythenshawe
Farm Centre have revealed that they are currently short of hay to feed their
livestock in winter and would be interested in taking hay from our grasslands
once they have been brought into a mowable condition. Initial costs include
establishing this mowable condition, purchase of agricultural machinery and the
provision of additional livestock and barn space.

If successful, this project should
radically improve the biodiversity of our area, enhance its attractiveness,
re-introduce active management and generate income and jobs for the locality
through the production of local food.

The project will also provide baseline
information on the feasibility of the re-introduction of controlled winter
flooding, increase the financial viability of Wythenshawe Farm Centre and act
as a template for the sustainable management of similar sites across
Manchester.

Forty years ago I was afforded just a
glimpse of an ancient landscape; a landscape dominated by flowery grasslands.
The green shades of the tall grasses were augmented by the yellows of
Buttercups, Dandelions and Common Catsear and the reddish haze of Sorrel.
Around the margins of these meadows and on the river banks were great patches
of pink Bistort, the creamy, frothy flowers of Sweet Cicely and Meadowsweet and
the huge leaves of Butterbur. These precious, beautiful remnants of a, once
more extensive, landscape were a tribute to the skill, knowledge and dedication
of local farming dynasties such as the Baileys and the Higginbothams and the
back-breaking toil of men like John Gresty and his nameless workmates. Then,
for decades, I had to watch them degrade and occasionally to watch them being
destroyed by people who didn’t understand their significance (and probably
didn’t even care). These ‘jewels in the Mersey Valley’s crown’ are presently
very faded - but now there’s hope that they can be restored.

Monday, 16 June 2014

Back in April of this year, the Greater Manchester Local Records Centre organised a Wildlife Recorders' Conference at Manchester Museum. I was asked to give a speech and you can read it below (well it took me long enough to write it!):

"I want to start by introducing you to a great Mancunian – a
person who some of you may, possibly, have never heard of.

His name was James Crowther and he was born in 1768, in the
cellar of a slum property near Deansgate. Most of his working life was spent as
a porter on the canal at Knott Mill. His life seems to have been an
extraordinary mixture of hardship and joy. He was an exuberant free spirit and
his great passion in life was botany. It was said of him that: “[H]e was
characterised by a cheerful, joyous disposition; was the life and soul of any
botanical party, and pursued both botany and entomology with the greatest
ardour.” He thought nothing of walking 15 or 20 miles, after work, in search of
plants. He always received a week’s holiday at Whitsun and used to walk to the
Yorkshire Dales. On one of these trips he discovered the Lady’s Slipper orchid.

Another of his finds was the Mudwort – which he found
growing on the (appropriately enough) mud by the side of a mere near Knutsford.
He told his friend Edward Hobson about this find and Hobson insisted that James
take him to see it. In the interim it rained heavily and when they reached the
mere the Mudwort was under water. Hobson went off to look for something else but
when he came back there was no sign of James. Suddenly the surface of the mere
erupted and up came James triumphantly clutching a specimen of the Mudwort!

Another lake which featured in James’s life was the one in
Tatton Park. One day he arrived in the park with a home-made contraption – a
long wooden pole with brass fittings. He was almost immediately grabbed by two
gamekeepers who accused him of poaching fish and dragged him before the owner
of the park, Mr Egerton. James explained to Egerton that the contraption was
for retrieving water weeds – not fish. Such were his powers of persuasion, and
so impressed was Egerton by his knowledge and enthusiasm, that he told his
keepers that James was not be molested again and was allowed to enter the park
any time he chose.

Gamekeepers were an occupational hazard for James and they
invariably accused him of poaching. Once he was chased across 3 or 4 miles of
open country and only just managed to escape. On another occasion he, and his
friend Richard Buxton, were searching for Cloudberries on the moors above
Stalybridge; they strayed onto a grouse moor and were apprehended by an irate
gamekeeper who refused to believe that they weren’t poachers. They knew that
the rich guarded their land zealously and that the penalties for poaching were
severe. On this occasion they finally managed to talk themselves out of a
dangerous situation.

James had many friends who shared his enthusiasm for plants
and natural history. Two of these friends were John Bland Wood, a medical doctor
from Salford and the aforementioned Richard Buxton, who was a poor shoe-maker
from Ancoats. Both of these men published floras of the Manchester region and
James contributed records to both publications.
Both of these books give us a tantalising glimpse of this part of the
country before industrialisation and urbanisation wiped out many of its natural
riches.

The confrontations that James and his friends had with
gamekeepers reminds us that, from the middle of the 18th century to
the middle of the 19th century, the rich and the nobility contrived
to have acts of Parliament passed which allowed them to enclose lands which had
formerly been held in common. These enclosures too often had a devastating
effect on wildlife and natural habitats. We don’t know what James and Richard
and their associates thought about this, but one of their contemporaries did
make his views known. This was John Clare, a farm labourer and poet from the
village of Helpston - which lies to the north of my home town of Peterborough. John
kept a nature diary for a few years and his poetry reveals an intimate and
detailed knowledge of his local wildlife – particularly of birds. One of his
greatest poems, entitled ‘Remembrances’, describes the catastrophic effect that
the Enclosure Movement had upon his beloved local countryside:

Inclosure like a
Buonaparte let not a thing remain

It levelled every bush and tree and levelled
every hill

And hung the moles for
traitors – though the brook is running still

It runs a naked stream
cold and chill.

And since Clare’s day, losses of wildlife have
accelerated, especially since the Second World War when so-called ‘agricultural
improvement’, and latterly rampant development, have become the norm. Recently,
a wide-ranging alliance of wildlife conservation groups published a report
entitled ‘The State of Nature’ - a comprehensive audit of what has happened to
the natural world in Britain over the last half century. The report was
co-ordinated and produced by the RSPB but 24 other bodies took part, ranging
from the Bat Conservation Trust to the British Lichen Society.

The report is, essentially, a catalogue of loss. It examines
the fates of 3,148 species of mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians,
invertebrates and plants in the British countryside since 1962. It concludes
that 60% of these species have declined in numbers, 30% have declined by more
than half and 10% are threatened with extinction. Populations of many species –
like the House Sparrow or the Garden Tiger Moth - which were common only a couple
of decades ago are now in steep decline. I note, in passing, that such a report
would not have been possible without the work of thousands of wildlife
recorders, working over decades, to accumulate the necessary records.

But perhaps we shouldn’t be surprised by these grim
statistics. It’s sad to relate that our species has been wiping out other
species for a very long time. It is now, more or less, agreed that when humans
migrated out of Africa, between 100 and 200 thousand years ago, they
exterminated large animals (mammoths, mastodons, giant ground sloths etc.) on
five continents. A paleobiologist, named John Alroy, told the American
journalist, Elizabeth Kolbert that this ‘megafauna extinction’ was a
“geologically instantaneous ecological catastrophe too gradual to be perceived
by the people who unleashed it.” But the rate of destruction appears to be
exponential and we’re now on the part of the curve where it starts climbing
close to vertical; the on-going catastrophe is now perceivable well within a single
human life-time. There have been five major extinction events in the history of
Planet Earth and we’re now living through the sixth. And there’s no doubt that
our own species is causing this one.

But there’s something very odd about this sixth extinction. Others
were caused by insensible natural forces – climate change, volcanism, asteroids
etc. but what makes this one unique is that it is being studied, in meticulous
detail, by elements of the causal agent! I wonder if there’s any evolutionary
significance to that fact – I don’t know – ask me again in another 100,000
years!

But there’s more to recording than just cataloguing loss.
Sadly, we live in a culture which is currently so uncivilised that it doesn’t
recognise, as James and his friends did, and modern people like you and I still
do, the value of the natural world for its own sake. We have to justify the
conservation of landscapes and habitats by proving that they are notably
biodiverse and worth conserving; and that means record keeping.

Everyone in this room understands where James’s mad
enthusiasm came from and why he derived so much joy from the natural world. A
world sterilised of its wildlife, and containing only humans and their
artifacts, would not be worth living in – and would probably not even be
survivable. And that’s why we have to stand against the rising tide of
destruction. Record keeping may seem a rather mundane and bureaucratic activity
– but it’s a powerful weapon in our armoury.

Dave Bishop, April 2014

References:

1. ‘The Late James Crowther, The Naturalist’: Obituary in the
Manchester Guardian, Jan 13, 1847 (Thanks to Andrew Simpson for directing me to
this remarkable document).

2. ‘The Selected Poems and Prose of John Clare’: edited by Eric
Robinson and Geoffrey Summerfield, Oxford University Press, 1967.

Friday, 9 May 2014

Manchester City Council and the RSPB are
set to develop an exciting new vision to connect people with nature in the
Mersey Valley.

The two organisations
will work closely with local people and groups at Chorlton Water Park and
Fletcher Moss, to explore ways of encouraging people to do something positive
for wildlife, reconnect with nature and help look after the Mersey Valley by
getting actively involved.

This
summer, two events will be held to launch the partnership and celebrate the
RSPB’s 125th anniversary, with the organisation ‘coming home’ to Fletcher Moss,
Didsbury - the place where the RSPB was founded in 1889, in protest against the
barbarous trade in plumes for women's hats.

The RSPB’s Big Wild Sleep Out will take place in June and a
'Giving Nature a Home' Festival will be held in August.

A series of workshops has also been planned to take place
throughout the year, allowing local people and organisations to contribute their
ideas - and help shape and deliver the vision for the Valley.

Local friends groups and other key
stakeholders are being encouraged to form a Mersey Valley Forum, which will be
jointly managed by the council and the RSPB.

Councillor Rosa Battle, Manchester City Council's Executive
Member for Culture and Leisure, said: “We're looking forward to working with
local people and the RSPB, to continue to look after the Mersey Valley and help
develop it for nature in the future.

"We want to encourage as many people as possible to get involved
with this summer's events, whether it's by trying some exciting new activities,
volunteering to help out, or by contributing their ideas."

The RSPB has already started talking to people and
collecting information on site, using questionnaires - and will continue to do
this until the summer, with both organisations keen to involve as many people as
possible in the Mersey Valley vision.

Peter Robertson, RSPB Regional Director for Northern England,
said: “I'm pleased the RSPB is returning to its roots to deliver this inspiring
project. Recent studies have shown that Britain’s wildlife is in trouble but we
know that together, people can make a difference; so we hope to work with the
local community to help give nature a home, whether that’s taking action in
their own homes or getting out and about in the valley, and lending a helping
hand.

"Staggeringly, 60 per cent of
Britain’s wildlife has decreased over the last 50 years, and more than 1 in 10
British species are threatened with extinction. In the same period, Britain has
lost 44 million birds and 95 per cent of our hedgehogs have disappeared since
the 1950s.

"Some shocking statistics
have also revealed that children now spend less time playing outside and have
less contact with nature than ever before. We believe that being connected with
nature should be part of every child's life and through this partnership, we
hope to enable this to happen.”PRESS
RELEASE ENDS

This is very exciting news! The RSPB is the UK's top nature conservation organisation and I'm sure that the Valley's wildlife will benefit enormously from their involvement.

Sunday, 27 April 2014

Recently local birder, Pete Hines sent me a link to his You-Tube video of a male Whinchat on Chorlton Ees. This bird is, apparently, a summer visitor to the British Isles. Pete has provided some links, on his You-Tube posting, which will provide you with much more information on this bird. Here's the link to the video:

Wednesday, 2 April 2014

On one fateful day 66 million years ago, the Earth’s
gravitational field captured an asteroid. It was travelling at around seventy
thousand kilometres per hour on a flat trajectory. It slammed into the Yucatan
Peninsula and generated a white-hot, supersonic shock-wave which was directed
mainly northward. The author of this book quotes a geologist who said:
“Basically, if you were a triceratops in Alberta, you had about two minutes
before you got vaporized (sic)”. Trillions of tons of sulphur- rich material were
blasted into the air, which led to a condition analogous to a ‘nuclear winter’.
Whole orders, families, genera and species of plants and animals went extinct –
most famously the non-avian dinosaurs. It took the world millions of years to
recover from these catastrophic circumstances – but they are probably why we’re
here, rather than some descendant of the dinosaurs.

There had, in fact, been four mass extinction events before
the one described above. The most devastating was probably the one at the end
of the Permian, some 252 million years ago when around 96% of all living things
went extinct – although the reasons for that event are not as well understood.
When interviewed recently (http://www.theguardian.com/theobserver/2014/mar/09/elizabeth-kolbert-whole-world-becoming-zoo)
the author of this book, Elizabeth Kolbert, stated that life on Earth is
“contingent” i.e. subject to chance or unforeseen circumstances. The title of
her book is based on the rapidly growing consensus among scientists that we’re now
living through the sixth extinction event in the history of life on Earth – and
that our own species, Homo sapiens,
is directly responsible for it. Our current epoch is increasingly being
referred to as the “Anthropocene” because our species is now so dominant and has
so modified the planet’s surface and atmosphere that the fate of the biosphere
is now in our hands.

Elizabeth Kolbert is an American journalist and author. She
is best known for her book on climate change, ‘Field Notes from a Catastrophe’
(2006), and as an observer and commentator on environmental matters for the
‘New Yorker’ magazine. This present book is brilliant, lucid, very readable,
scientifically up-to-date, tragic and utterly terrifying. We learn that
although certain species, such as the Great Auk and the Dodo, have been
deliberately exterminated through over-exploitation in the recent past, more
recent losses can be directly attributed to our gross and ruthless
modifications of the planet’s surface and atmosphere – in particular there are
direct links between species’ extinction and climate change. For example,
carbon dioxide is soluble in water and produces a weak acid. As the CO2
content of the atmosphere increases, the oceans become more acidic. This
affects the viability of organisms that use calcium in their body plans;
shellfish and corals are particularly badly affected. In tropical waters, reefs
formed by corals provide ecological niches for thousands of non-coral species;
if corals are damaged or killed, all of those dependent species are put at risk
as well. Tropical rain forests contain hundreds of different tree species. Each
tree species has specific habitat requirements and also provides niches for
many other species of plants and animals. As temperature rises, trees which
produce few seeds and/or are slow growing are at a serious disadvantage, and,
consequently, so are their attendant species. Trees which produce lots of seeds
and/or are fast growing can move uphill to cooler climes. But even the latter
are still at risk because many rain forests are now so fragmented that there
are limited spaces for them to move to.

The much vaunted ‘globalisation’ is a serious problem too.
Many organisms have been (often inadvertently) transported around the world and
have caused havoc in places in which they do not belong. Currently, Central
American amphibians and North American bats are being wiped out by imported
fungal diseases.

I took away two surprising ideas from this book:

1. This is undoubtedly the first extinction event in history
which is being studied, in meticulous detail, by elements of the causal agent!
In her research for this book, Ms Kolbert interviewed many scientists working
in the field and accompanied some of them on their field trips. The ingenuity
and dedication of these scientists is often astonishing.

2. Time scales can often be difficult, or impossible, to
grasp; who can get their head round 66 million years – let alone 252 million
years – for example? It is now, more or less, agreed that when humans migrated
out of Africa, they exterminated large animals (mammoths, giant ground sloths,
moas etc.) everywhere they went. Kolbert interviewed a paleobiologist, named
John Alroy, who described this ‘megafauna extinction’ as a “geologically
instantaneous ecological catastrophe too gradual to be perceived by the people
who unleashed it.” The ominous fact is, though, that extinctions are currently
happening within single human lifetimes.

This is an important but scary book. Brace
yourself and read it!Dave Bishop, March 2014Note: This review first appeared in 'Manchester Climate Monthly'. To find out more about Manchester's premier climate journal, you should e-mail the editor, Marc Hudson, on mcmonthly@gmail.com.PS: I tried to add a picture of the cover of this book to top of this article but, for some unknown reason, this - bleep, bleep, bleep, bleeping - software wouldn't let me!!

Postings by subject

Welcome to our blog

The Friends of Chorlton Meadows cover Chorlton Ees, Ivy Green and Hardy Farm community orchard. The group is interested in taking a practical approach to working with the Mersey Valley Countryside Warden Service to manage the sites for the conservation of flora and fauna; and have an active programme of events through the year.